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Show rigkTout of the air 1 .. . By EARLE FERRIS Little Ann Shepherd, "Joyce" of ' "Joyce Jordan Girl Interne," is popularizing the use of the sidesaddle side-saddle on Central Park's bridle over CBS on Sunday, Sept. 29 ground will soon be broken for the home for indigent actors which the screen actors' work on the program pro-gram is paying for. Virginia Payne, "Ma Perkins" star, will give a group of lectures this fall at Northwestern University's Univer-sity's School of Speech, as she did paths since she took up the riding cuilom of the gay nineties in her morning canters. Talk about big guns brings to mmd the time during the first World War when News Analyst Raymond Gram Swing, found out about "Big Bertha," the cannon that shelled Paris. The MBS commentator, com-mentator, then a war correspondent, correspond-ent, scooped the world with the story of the gun that fired 75 miles. Providing musical accompaniments accompani-ments for everything from Bob Burns' bazooka to concert cellists last vear. Virginia once taught at tlie famous Schuster-Martin School of Drama in Cincinnati, really knows her vowels and consonants. con-sonants. Now that television is resuming after a month's layoff for technical techni-cal changes, look for the networks to grab the better-looking bandleaders band-leaders to carry on experiments in music. Among the foremost is Peter Van Steeden, a Hollywood leading-man leading-man type, who's now batoning "Mr. District Attorney" on NBC Wednesday nights. Maestro Bob Crosby, pictured here, assures the college crowd that his search for a sorority song I is the problem of big, jovial John Scott Trotter, Thursday evening Music Hall maestro. But nothing seems to bother this Southern gentleman, gen-tleman, pictured here, whose drawl has "murdered" many a good line of K.M.H. banter. ' Gabriel Heatter, host of "We, the People," has stopped signing autograph books with the conventional conven-tional "best regards." Fans invariably inva-riably ask Gabe to write "We the People, Speak i" Now that it has been definitely settled that the Screen Guild Theatre The-atre will return to the airwaves to equal the frat ditty, "Sweetheart "Sweet-heart of Sigma Chi," will be resumed re-sumed in full force after Labor Day, when students begin returning return-ing to universities. When the right corority song is found it will get plenty of plugging in Crosby's I Dixieland Music Shop" program on Thursdays and on records. |